SCORE's latest infographic examines the benefits of having retirement plans for themselves and their employees
Did you know that 40% of small business owners are not confident they’ll be able to retire before age 65?
Our latest infographic, “Small Business Retirement: Investing in Your Future” explores why small business owners are not saving for retirement - and why they should reconsider.
Entrepreneurs aren’t saving for their own retirement
A shocking 34% of entrepreneurs have no retirement savings plan for themselves. The responses for why they had no plan in place varied greatly. Among those surveyed:
- 37% don’t think they make enough profit to save for retirement
- 21% used their retirement savings to invest in their business
- 18% plan to sell their business and use the money to fund their retirement
- 12% don’t see a need to save for retirement
- 12% don’t plan on retiring
Aside from not saving for their own retirement, small business owners are also less likely to offer retirement plans to their employees.
The trend away from retirement plans for small businesses
When comparing the size of a company to their employee retirement packages, small businesses were the least likely to provide retirement options.
- 28% of businesses with less than 10 employees offer retirement plans
- 51% of businesses with 10-24 employees offer retirement plans
- 63% of businesses with 25-49 employees offer retirement plans
- 73% of businesses with 50-99 employees offer retirement plans
- 87% of businesses with over 100 employees offer retirement plans
These statistics demonstrate that as businesses grow, the need to offer retirement plans grows with them.
Why small businesses aren’t offering retirement plans
In a separate study, employers explained their reasoning for not offering retirement plans to their employees.
- 71% said it was too expensive to set up
- 63% said their organization doesn’t have the resources to administer the retirement plan
- 50% said employees aren’t interested
- 22% said they hadn’t thought about providing a retirement plan
- 15% said the organization was concerned about how to choose a provider
- 13% said the organization was too new
Despite data showing that the benefits of providing employee retirement plans heavily outweigh the negatives, there is still a persistence among small businesses to eschew setting them up. Expense continues to be the top reason why even though most retirement savings plans cost employers only 2.4% of an employee’s compensation. For small businesses watching every penny, this seems to be reason enough.
Retirement benefits aid recruitment and retention
While the vast majority of small businesses cite expense as the top reason why they don’t implement them, there are a multitude of benefits associated with retirement packages that small businesses may be overlooking.
When small business owners who do provide retirement plans were asked why they chose to do so, their answers were telling.
- 94% said retirement benefits help drive recruitment
- 52% said retirement packages help attract better quality employees
- 48% said departing employees cited a lack of retirement benefits as an influence on their decision
- 47% said retirement plans inspire increased employee engagement
When it comes to planning for retirement or providing retirement options for your employees, the benefits are significant. Not only is there a clear equivalency between retirement plans and growth, there is also a tangible impact on the quality of employees that small businesses attract and how engaged those employees are once they’re on the team.
If you’re interested in setting up a retirement package and would like some guidance, reach out to a SCORE mentor to determine the best options for you and your business.
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Funded, in part, through a Cooperative Agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration. All opinions, and/or recommendations expressed herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the SBA.